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Gay Talese

Read through the most famous quotes from Gay Talese




For example, many colleges in their writing programs teach some of my work.


— Gay Talese


#example #for example #many #programs #some

I am writing about people who are alive in the city of New York during mid-20th-century America. And these people are like a character in a play or they are figures in a short story or a novel.


— Gay Talese


#alive #am #america #character #city

I could come up with 50 stories that I am thinking about.


— Gay Talese


#am #come #could #i #i am

I write and rewrite and rewrite and write and like to turn in what I think is finished work.


— Gay Talese


#finished work #i #i think #i write #like

News, if unreported, has no impact. It might as well have not happened at all.


— Gay Talese


#impact #might #news #well

People go to restaurants for so many different reasons. To court a girl, to make some deal. Maybe to talk to some lawyer about how to get an alimony settlement better than they got last week.


— Gay Talese


#alimony #better #court #deal #different

Restaurants are a wonderful escape for me. And are for a lot of people.


— Gay Talese


#lot #me #people #restaurants #wonderful

The real problem is what to do with the problem-solvers after the problems are solved.


— Gay Talese


#problem #problems #real #real problem #solved

The reporter wrote with the hope that he would get a by-line in the Times, a testimony to his being alive on that day and all the tomorrows of microfilm.


— Gay Talese


#being #day #get #his #hope

Thirteen years I took on this last book.


— Gay Talese


#i #last #teen years #thirteen #thirteen years






About Gay Talese

Gay Talese Quotes




Did you know about Gay Talese?

The assistant coach had the duty of calling in the chronicle of each game to the local newspaper and when he complained he was too busy to take care of it the head coach turned to Talese to take over the duties. "
In 1964 Talese publiGay Talesed The Bridge: The Building of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge (1964) a reporter-style non-fiction depiction of the construction of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge in New York City. As Carol Polsgrove points out in her history of Esquire in the Sixties it was the kind of reporting he liked to do best: "just being there observing waiting for the climactic moment when the mask would drop and true character would reveal itself.

As a writer for The New York Times and Esquire magazine in the 1960s he helped to define literary journalism. Talese is a visiting writer at the Master of Professional Writing Program at the University of Southern California each spring.

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